*Registration Details: The meeting space is limited; register early and be considerate of others; if you find that you cannot attend afterwards, please modify your registration accordingly or email one of the leaders. <br><br>

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<br><br>

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[http://www.tibco.com/ TIBCO Software Inc.] is the sponsor of this meeting.

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*Registration Details: Register early and be considerate of others; if you find that you cannot attend afterwards, please modify your registration accordingly. <br><br>

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* Meeting Agenda:

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'''Practical Android Security'''

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'''Ken Johnson'''<br/><br/>

Abstract:

Abstract:

+

While working to secure rails applications in a truly Agile development environment, it became clear that the Rails and Ruby ecosystem needed attention from the security community in the form of free and open training, and the events that have transpired within the last few months have only reinforced that belief. RailsGoat is an attempt to bring attention to both the problems that most frequently occur in Rails as well as the solutions for remediation. To accomplish this, we've built a vulnerable Rails application that aligns with the OWASP Top 10 and can be used as a training tool for Rails-based development shops.

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Building secure Android applications can be achieved with a mix of common sense, leveraging platform security features, and following secure development best practices. This presentation will focus on security “quick wins” during development and will cover techniques that can reduce the overall attack surface within Android applications.

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The OWASP GoatDroid and OWASP MobiSec tools will be used throughout the presentation to demonstrate issues encountered in the real world. We will cover the attack surface for Android and highlight the most prevalent security flaws found within production applications.

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'''Jack Mannino'''<br/><br/>

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Abstract:

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Like it or not, your developers copy and paste code and "borrow" ideas from open source projects. This presentation will detail the results of analyzing over 100,000 Android applications available publicly on GitHub. We will examine the most prevalent frameworks and libraries in use and discuss their implications for security. Our focus is less theoretical and more practical based on what developers are actually doing and using within their apps. From there, we will take a deeper look at common vulnerabilities that are systemic throughout the Android application ecosystem. We will look at specific examples of vulnerable real-world applications, and fix code on the fly.

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Topics:

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*Mobile Application Security

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*OWASP GoatDroid

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*OWASP MobiSec

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<br>

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<hr>

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'''About the Speaker''' -

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Jack Mannino is the CEO of nVisium Security, an application security firm located within the Washington DC area. At nVisium, he helps to ensure that large corporations, government agencies, and software startups have the tools they need to build and maintain successful application security initiatives. He is an active Android security researcher, and has a keen interest in identifying security issues and trends on a large scale. Jack is the leader and founder of the OWASP Mobile Security Project. He also serves as a board member on the OWASP Northern Virginia chapter. Jack is also the lead developer for the OWASP GoatDroid Project, which is a collection of vulnerable Android applications used for training and education.

+

'''About the Speakers''' -

+

Ken Johnson is the former Manager of LivingSocial.com's application security team where he built their security program before leaving for his true home as the CTO of nVisium Security, a VA-based application security company. Ken is the primary developer of the Web Exploitation Framework and contributes to other open source application security projects as often as time permits. He has spoken at AppSec DC 2010 and 2012, OWASP NoVA and Phoenix chapters, Northern Virginia Hackers Association (NoVAH) and is a contributor to the Attack Research team.

Jack Mannino is the CEO of nVisium Security, a VA-based application security company. At nVisium, he helps to ensure that large corporations, government agencies, and software startups have the tools they need to build and maintain successful security initiatives. He is an active Android security researcher/tinkerer, and has a keen interest in identifying security issues and trends on a large scale. Jack is a leader and founder of the OWASP Mobile Security Project. He is the lead developer for the OWASP GoatDroid project, and is the chairman of the OWASP Northern Virginia chapter.

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Once at the building, enter the building from the North and go down the stairs.

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'''Call For Topics & Speakers''' <br><br>

'''Call For Topics & Speakers''' <br><br>

If you are interested in presenting or have a topic you'd like discussed at a future meeting, please contact a [https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Long_Island#tab=Chapter_Board_Members.2FContacts LI board member].

If you are interested in presenting or have a topic you'd like discussed at a future meeting, please contact a [https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Long_Island#tab=Chapter_Board_Members.2FContacts LI board member].

* Location: IT conference room in the lower level of Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise (Building HHE on Map upper right), Adelphi University. Directions: [http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&sugexp=kjrmc&cp=8&gs_id=v&xhr=t&qe=QWRlbHBoaSA&qesig=JiDWqoZNuHjzxH4mu6hKFg&pkc=AFgZ2tkIdEHC3xl3TdCwzVHV-FzgNlMu6AZnN1IK_YD8inckTi6GpPNW_NXm1BSV3gh-c-dec9v32CZ8YRCkAnZnP8Jja8WVtw&gs_upl=&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.,cf.osb&biw=1302&bih=938&um=1&ie=UTF-8&cid=0,0,9404387279279361491&fb=1&hq=adelphi+university&hnear=0x89c286e540a98237:0x6a5b71f23a74346c,Old+Westbury,+NY&gl=us&daddr=1+South+Avenue,+Garden+City,+NY+11530-0701&geocode=0,40.721203,-73.652149&ei=xHScTsqnMefm0QGXhpiaBA&sa=X&oi=local_result&ct=directions-to&resnum=1&ved=0CFYQngIwAA Map] | [http://www.adelphi.edu/visitors/campus.php Campus Map] Enter the building from the North and go down the stairs.

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* Time: 7:00pm-9:30pm

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*''Free pizza and beverage will be provided.''

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+

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<br>

+

*Registration Details: The meeting space is limited; register early and be considerate of others; if you find that you cannot attend afterwards, please modify your registration accordingly or email one of the leaders. <br><br>

+

+

* Meeting Agenda:

+

+

'''Practical Android Security'''

+

+

Abstract:

+

+

Building secure Android applications can be achieved with a mix of common sense, leveraging platform security features, and following secure development best practices. This presentation will focus on security “quick wins” during development and will cover techniques that can reduce the overall attack surface within Android applications.

+

+

The OWASP GoatDroid and OWASP MobiSec tools will be used throughout the presentation to demonstrate issues encountered in the real world. We will cover the attack surface for Android and highlight the most prevalent security flaws found within production applications.

+

+

Topics:

+

*Mobile Application Security

+

*OWASP GoatDroid

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*OWASP MobiSec

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[http://www.slideshare.net/JackMannino/owasp-top-10-mobile-risks One of Jack's presentations on mobile security]

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<br>

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<hr>

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'''About the Speaker''' -

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Jack Mannino is the CEO of nVisium Security, an application security firm located within the Washington DC area. At nVisium, he helps to ensure that large corporations, government agencies, and software startups have the tools they need to build and maintain successful application security initiatives. He is an active Android security researcher, and has a keen interest in identifying security issues and trends on a large scale. Jack is the leader and founder of the OWASP Mobile Security Project. He also serves as a board member on the OWASP Northern Virginia chapter. Jack is also the lead developer for the OWASP GoatDroid Project, which is a collection of vulnerable Android applications used for training and education.

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+

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=='''February Meeting'''==

'''In a continuation of the previous meeting we have once again organized a lab to demonstrate the OWASP top 10 vulnerabilities. Please find the details below''' <br> <br>

'''In a continuation of the previous meeting we have once again organized a lab to demonstrate the OWASP top 10 vulnerabilities. Please find the details below''' <br> <br>

Revision as of 06:21, 27 July 2013

OWASP Long Island

Welcome to the Long Island chapter homepage. Click here to join the local chapter mailing list.

Participation

OWASP Foundation (Overview Slides) is a professional association of global members and is and open to anyone interested in learning more about software security. Local chapters are run independently and guided by the Chapter_Leader_Handbook. As a 501(c)(3) non-profit professional association your support and sponsorship of any meeting venue and/or refreshments is tax-deductible. Financial contributions should only be made online using the authorized online chapter donation button. To be a SPEAKER at ANY OWASP Chapter in the world simply review the speaker agreement and then contact the local chapter leader with details of what OWASP PROJECT, independent research or related software security topic you would like to present on.

Next Meetings

Registration Details: The meeting space is limited; register early and be considerate of others; if you find that you cannot attend afterwards, please modify your registration accordingly or email one of the leaders.

Abstract:
While working to secure rails applications in a truly Agile development environment, it became clear that the Rails and Ruby ecosystem needed attention from the security community in the form of free and open training, and the events that have transpired within the last few months have only reinforced that belief. RailsGoat is an attempt to bring attention to both the problems that most frequently occur in Rails as well as the solutions for remediation. To accomplish this, we've built a vulnerable Rails application that aligns with the OWASP Top 10 and can be used as a training tool for Rails-based development shops.

Jack Mannino

Abstract:
Like it or not, your developers copy and paste code and "borrow" ideas from open source projects. This presentation will detail the results of analyzing over 100,000 Android applications available publicly on GitHub. We will examine the most prevalent frameworks and libraries in use and discuss their implications for security. Our focus is less theoretical and more practical based on what developers are actually doing and using within their apps. From there, we will take a deeper look at common vulnerabilities that are systemic throughout the Android application ecosystem. We will look at specific examples of vulnerable real-world applications, and fix code on the fly.

About the Speakers -

Ken Johnson is the former Manager of LivingSocial.com's application security team where he built their security program before leaving for his true home as the CTO of nVisium Security, a VA-based application security company. Ken is the primary developer of the Web Exploitation Framework and contributes to other open source application security projects as often as time permits. He has spoken at AppSec DC 2010 and 2012, OWASP NoVA and Phoenix chapters, Northern Virginia Hackers Association (NoVAH) and is a contributor to the Attack Research team.

Jack Mannino is the CEO of nVisium Security, a VA-based application security company. At nVisium, he helps to ensure that large corporations, government agencies, and software startups have the tools they need to build and maintain successful security initiatives. He is an active Android security researcher/tinkerer, and has a keen interest in identifying security issues and trends on a large scale. Jack is a leader and founder of the OWASP Mobile Security Project. He is the lead developer for the OWASP GoatDroid project, and is the chairman of the OWASP Northern Virginia chapter.

Call For Topics & Speakers

If you are interested in presenting or have a topic you'd like discussed at a future meeting, please contact a LI board member.

If you join our mailing list, then you will receive details of the meeting as soon as they are finalized.

September Meeting

Location: IT conference room in the lower level of Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise (Building HHE on Map upper right), Adelphi

Agenda:Jim Manico will be presenting on the topic of Top 10 Web Defenses through Secure Application Programming

Abstract: Top Ten Web Defenses We cannot hack or firewall our way
secure. Application programmers need to learn to code in a secure
fashion if we have any chance of providing organizations with proper
defenses in the current threatscape. This talk will discuss the 10
most important security-centric computer programming techniques
necessary to build low-risk web-based applications.

Speaker Bio: Jim Manico is the VP of Security Architecture for WhiteHat
Security, a web security firm. Jim is a participant and project
manager of the OWASP Developer Cheatsheet series. He is also the
producer and host of the OWASP Podcast Series.

May Meeting

Guest Speaker Jack Mannino discusses the OWASP Top 10 Mobile Risks

Date: Thursday, May 10, 2012

Location: IT conference room in the lower level of Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise (Building HHE on Map upper right), Adelphi University. Directions: Map | Campus Map Enter the building from the North and go down the stairs.

Time: 7:00pm-9:30pm

Free pizza and beverage will be provided.

Registration Details: The meeting space is limited; register early and be considerate of others; if you find that you cannot attend afterwards, please modify your registration accordingly or email one of the leaders.

Meeting Agenda:

Practical Android Security

Abstract:

Building secure Android applications can be achieved with a mix of common sense, leveraging platform security features, and following secure development best practices. This presentation will focus on security “quick wins” during development and will cover techniques that can reduce the overall attack surface within Android applications.

The OWASP GoatDroid and OWASP MobiSec tools will be used throughout the presentation to demonstrate issues encountered in the real world. We will cover the attack surface for Android and highlight the most prevalent security flaws found within production applications.

Jack Mannino is the CEO of nVisium Security, an application security firm located within the Washington DC area. At nVisium, he helps to ensure that large corporations, government agencies, and software startups have the tools they need to build and maintain successful application security initiatives. He is an active Android security researcher, and has a keen interest in identifying security issues and trends on a large scale. Jack is the leader and founder of the OWASP Mobile Security Project. He also serves as a board member on the OWASP Northern Virginia chapter. Jack is also the lead developer for the OWASP GoatDroid Project, which is a collection of vulnerable Android applications used for training and education.

February Meeting

In a continuation of the previous meeting we have once again organized a lab to demonstrate the OWASP top 10 vulnerabilities. Please find the details below

Registration Details: This chapter meeting has been organized to be a lab; as a result, space is limited in the room to a maximum of 21 people. Register early and be considerate of others; if you find that you cannot attend afterwards, please modify your registration accordingly.

Dr. Kees Leune is an Information Security Officer, Strategist, Professor, Mentor, Adviser, Consultant, Speaker and occasional open source developer. He blogs at http://www.leune.org and can be found on Twitter as @leune. Kees has extensive experience in information security and holds several professional certifications, including the CISSP, GCIH, GCFA, CISM, and CISA.

November

Registration Details: This chapter meeting has been organized to be a lab; as a result, space is limited in the room to a maximum of 21 people. Register early and be considerate of others; if you find that you cannot attend afterwards, please modify your registration accordingly.

Dr. Kees Leune is an Information Security Officer, Strategist, Professor, Mentor, Adviser, Consultant, Speaker and occasional open source developer. He blogs at http://www.leune.org and can be found on Twitter as @leune. Kees has extensive experience in information security and holds several professional certifications, including the CISSP, GCIH, GCFA, CISM, and CISA.

September

Date: Thursday, September 22, 2011

Time: 6:30pm - 9:30pm

Location: University Club Facility at David Mack Hall, Hosftra University, Hempstead, NY 11549-1000

Topics & Speakers:

Helen Gao - Cross-site scripting, the most prevalent. Web application vulnerability:
Helen will discuss one of the most widespread Web application Vulnerabilities. How can an application be attacked and how to protect yourself.

About the Speaker - Helen Gao has worked in the field of information security since 1991. Helen has worked as an application developer, project manager, and software architect. Her employment history includes working at a financial institution, a market research company, a high-tech device manufacturer and a software company. Helen is currently a senior architect at TIBCO Software Inc. Her job duties include the design and development of complex event processing software. The protection of information security in such systems is challenging, due to their strict performance requirements in terms of high event throughput and low processing latency. Helen welcomes the challenge and uses the knowledge she obtained from OWASP to manage project life cycles.

About the Speaker - Ryan Behan is the Director of Internal IT at Netsmart Technologies Inc. He is a strong proponent of information sharing, application security and improving business agility through automation and scalable infrastructure.

Robert Gezelter - Minimum Necessary Implementation: Reducing Attack Surface increase Security
Ensuring the security and integrity of web-based applications is a constant challenge. Web-based applications are inherently customer-facing, and an attractive avenue of attack. However, vulnerability is often unnecessarily increased by poor technology choices. Different technologies have different degrees of vulnerability. ActiveX creates a higher exposure than Java or JavaScript, which in turn has more potential for abuse than simple CSS. Some approaches (e.g., unguarded SQL queries) are particularly vulnerable to attack (e.g., SQL injection); other approaches unnecessarily create exposures by requiring unrestricted trust (e.g., ActiveX).
Judicious division of responsibilities between clients and servers is another aspect of the same problem, as clients are inherently less-trustable than servers.
We will examine how using the minimum necessary technology reduces attack surface, decreases vulnerabilities, and decreases costs.

About the speaker - Mr. Gezelter has more than 30 years of international consulting experience on architectures, protocols, and implementation techniques in both the private and public sectors. He has spoken widely at conferences throughout the United States and internationally. He has also published numerous technical papers and book chapters, including two chapters in the Computer Security Handbook, 5th Edition and two chapters in the Handbook of Information Security. He also publishes Ruminations - An IT Blog on a variety of topics relating to Information Technology and systems architect

The OWASP Mobile Project is in its infancy, but has generated a lot of interest in the security and mobile development communities. Recently, delegates at the OWASP Summit in Portugal started laying the ground work to help guide the project through its inaugural year. One of the objectives for this year will be to ratify the current, unofficial OWASP Mobile Top 10 List. This presentation will do a deep dive into the current list, citing real world examples of insecure mobile applications.

In 2011, mass malware is still the most common source of compromise on corporate networks. Bots like Zeus, Gozi, and Clampi successfully infect devices despite organizations carefully managing disclosed vulnerabilities and subscribing to detailed analysis of the latest malware families. Existing efforts at malware prevention focus broadly on vulnerabilities and their impact yet ignore the means by which they are exploited and the motivations, opportunities and capabilities of attackers, which has allowed this problem to become worse year-after-year.

In this talk, I introduce an intelligence-driven approach to malware defense, focusing on attacker's capabilities and methods, with data collected from the most popular crimeware packs currently deployed in-the-wild. This analysis identifies the means by which exploits are developed and selected for inclusion in crimeware packs, identifies defenses that are outside the capability of malware exploit writers to bypass, and helps attendees evaluate not just the exploitability, but the probability of a vulnerability being exploited. This study shows that, until crimeware packs substantially advance in sophistication, only a few simple defensive tactics are required to protect users from such opportunistic threats.

WebScarab Demo / Web Vulnerabilities Intro WebScarab is a framework for analysing applications that communicate using the HTTP and HTTPS protocols. It is written in Java, and is thus portable to many platforms. WebScarab has several modes of operation, implemented by a number of plugins. In its most common usage, WebScarab operates as an intercepting proxy, allowing the operator to review and modify requests created by the browser before they are sent to the server, and to review and modify responses returned from the server before they are received by the browser. WebScarab is able to intercept both HTTP and HTTPS communication. The operator can also review the conversations (requests and responses) that have passed through WebScarab.

In this demo we'll use WebScarab against some emulated vulnerabilities developed by Blake Cornell.

Free pizza and beverage will be provided. After event networking will be held at a local bar.